Catan should be the game with the largest number of foreign reviews, which is enough to prove its popularity and popularity, and it has launched many expansion packs. 5. Ticket Journey (hand card mana
Catan should be the game with the largest number of foreign reviews, which is enough to prove its popularity and popularity, and it has launched many expansion packs. 5. Ticket Journey (hand card management area planning tabletop game) Ticket Journey is a game series that is relatively popular among players. Its family includes many versions, and European Ticket Journey brings you a brand new European adventure. journey. From Edinburgh to Constantinople, from Lisbon to Moscow, you will visit the great European cities of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The game remains bright and simple and can be learned within 5 minutes. It is suitable for both family users and experienced players, and is more popular among girls. 6. Manila (dice table game) Berthing, loading and profit are all the game of Manila, which can be played by 3-5 players simultaneously. Players must risk the ship being wrecked in a storm, or have the ship slowly scrape in the warehouse. While players can speculate on the success or failure of each action, ultimately fate rests with the dice. Manila does not have a relatively in-depth trading strategy. Instead, it gamifies the business market. Each person plays a different division of labor in a trading round to maximize profits. 7. City of Fertility (role-playing construction tabletop game) City of Fertility is a card city construction game. Players need to choose their characters from a gradually decreasing number of characters in order each round, and must guess the opponent’s thoughts and ideas. Choose the opponent's role. Each character has special effects, allowing players to obtain more gold coins or enjoy privileges. The object of the game is to build eight buildings and get the highest score, and once a player builds their eighth building, the game is over. The player with the highest score at this time wins. 8. Carcassonne (area control table game) Carcassonne, also known as Carcassonne and Carcassonne, is a German table game suitable for two to five people. The game was designed by Klaus-Jürgen Wrede and won the Spiel des Jahres (Game of the Year) award in 2001. The name Carcassonne comes from a town in southwest France famous for its walls. Participants play the role of monarchs in the medieval era and send their cronies to expand territories. The cronies play different roles to occupy or manage territories. Whoever uses the strategy properly will win the final victory. Gameplay During the game, cards are used to construct a medieval landscape, and players play the role of princes and use their followers to occupy land to gain points. The basic version of the game contains 72 cards, one of which is the starting card. At the beginning of the game, the starting card is placed in the center of the table, and the remaining 71 cards are shuffled with their backs facing up. During the game, players draw cards in sequence and place them in appropriate locations. Each card may contain the following elements: grassland, road, city, monastery. Players must connect the terrain in their hand to the same terrain on the map. In other words, grasslands must connect to grasslands, roads must connect to roads, and cities must connect to cities. After combining the cards in their hands each time, players can consider sending a follower to occupy the land. The grasslands were occupied by farmers, the roads were occupied by bandits, the cities were occupied by knights, and the monasteries were occupied by monks. However, it should be noted that if this terrain clearly belongs to other players (that is, there are already other followers on the connected terrain), it cannot be occupied. However, if there are two followers on the same terrain at the same time, both people get the points for that terrain at the same time. When the last card is put down, the game ends. The one with the highest score wins. 9. Dwarf Mine (Card Skills Role Playing Table Game) Dwarf Mine is a game of wits between bad guys and good guys. Participants secretly draw identity cards at the beginning and become good dwarves who mine or bad dwarves who destroy. The goal of the good people is to extend the road to gold (only one of the three covered destination cards is gold), and the bad people The mission is to destroy. How to complete tasks quickly, how to guess the identity of others, simple rules, and a strategic process make it one of the most accepted games by newcomers after Werewolf and Uno.10. Werewolf (role-playing reasoning and voting table game) is actually a killing game, but there are many characters, and it is equipped with the Crescent Expansion to play together, which reduces the need to advance the game simply through language expression. The game alternates between day and night. At night, the werewolf secretly killed a villager. During the day, killed villagers are informed and exited from the game. The remaining villagers (normal and special) then confer and vote on the player they suspect is a werewolf, during which special characters can join the general discussion to provide some clues or hints. Werewolf is a social game that can be played without props and is suitable for N-multiplayer play.